Body Mass Estimates of an Exceptionally Complete Stegosaurus

Body Mass Estimates of an Exceptionally Complete Stegosaurus

View metadata, citation and similar papers atDownloaded core.ac.uk from http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/ on July 19, 2016 brought to you by CORE provided by Natural History Museum Repository Palaeontology Body mass estimates of an exceptionally rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org complete Stegosaurus (Ornithischia: Thyreophora): comparing volumetric and linear bivariate mass estimation methods Research 1 2 1 Cite this article: Brassey CA, Maidment SCR, Charlotte A. Brassey , Susannah C. R. Maidment and Paul M. Barrett Barrett PM. 2015 Body mass estimates of an 1Department of Earth Sciences, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5DB, UK exceptionally complete Stegosaurus 2Department of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College, South Kensington Campus, (Ornithischia: Thyreophora): comparing London SW7 2AZ, UK volumetric and linear bivariate mass estimation methods. Biol. Lett. 11: 20140984. Body mass is a key biological variable, but difficult to assess from fossils. Various techniques exist for estimating body mass from skeletal parameters, http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2014.0984 but few studies have compared outputs from different methods. Here, we apply several mass estimation methods to an exceptionally complete skel- eton of the dinosaur Stegosaurus. Applying a volumetric convex-hulling technique to a digital model of Stegosaurus, we estimate a mass of 1560 kg Received: 21 November 2014 (95% prediction interval 1082–2256 kg) for this individual. By contrast, Accepted: 10 February 2015 bivariate equations based on limb dimensions predict values between 2355 and 3751 kg and require implausible amounts of soft tissue and/or high body densities. When corrected for ontogenetic scaling, however, volumetric and linear equations are brought into close agreement. Our results raise con- cerns regarding the application of predictive equations to extinct taxa with Subject Areas: no living analogues in terms of overall morphology and highlight the sensi- palaeontology, biomechanics tivity of bivariate predictive equations to the ontogenetic status of the specimen. We emphasize the significance of rare, complete fossil skeletons Keywords: in validating widely applied mass estimation equations based on incomplete Stegosaurus, body mass, scaling equations, skeletal material and stress the importance of accurately determining volumetric model, photogrammetry specimen age prior to further analyses. Author for correspondence: Charlotte A. Brassey 1. Introduction e-mail: [email protected] In extant taxa, body mass is an indicator of fundamental ecological and physi- ological traits such as population density, metabolism and cost-of-transport [1]. Key evolutionary transitions in deep time, such as the origin of avian flight [2] and the adaptive radiation of mammals around the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary [3], have been interpreted in the context of body size: thus body mass reconstruction in extinct species is of considerable interest. Ideally, mass estimates for extinct taxa would be based upon complete specimens, but such material is rare. Consequently, many mass estimation tech- niques for fossil taxa rely upon measurements taken from commonly preserved skeletal elements. Recently, the sum of femoral and humeral circumferences was shown to correlate strongly with mass in extant taxa [4]. However, the applicability of this equation to fossil groups with unusual morphological fea- tures, overly robust/gracile limb elements or lying outside of the size range of extant taxa, remains to be tested. Additionally, application of bivariate predic- tive equations to specimens of uncertain ontogenetic status is potentially Electronic supplementary material is available problematic given evidence of allometric scaling of limb dimensions with age at http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2014.0984 or among dinosaur taxa [5]. via http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org. & 2015 The Authors. Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited. Downloaded from http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/ on July 19, 2016 (a)(b) 2 rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org (c)(d) Biol. Lett. 11 : 20140984 (e)(f ) (g) Figure 1. Reconstructions of Stegosaurus stenops (NHMUK R36730) and associated convex hulls. (a,b) Cvol(min);(c,d) Cvol(pref);(e,f) Cvol(max);(g) Cvol(C&E). (Online version in colour.) When specimens are complete, volumetric methods of mass Formation near Shell, Wyoming. It is substantially complete, with estimation can be used [6,7]. Such methods incorporate all of the all body regions represented except the left forelimb and part of available data from the specimen and are not biased by the the tail. NHMUK R36730 is classified as a ‘young adult’ based on problem of unexpectedly robust/gracile elements, nor do they histological sampling [8,9] (electronic supplementary material, S1). rely on regressions that are extrapolated beyond empirically The specimen was digitized as disarticulated bones using photo- grammetry [10] and the freely available software ‘VisualSFM’ based body mass data. Nevertheless, the reconstruction process (http://ccwu.me/vsfm) and ‘Meshlab’ (http://meshlab.source- involves a degree of subjectivity and sensitivity analyses are forge.net) (electronic supplementary material, S2). essential to quantify the effects of anatomical uncertainties [6]. The skeleton was posed in 3DsMax (www.autodesk.com/ Convex hulling [7] circumvents this problem by fitting ‘shrink- 3dsmax) and a convex hull model produced (Cvol(pref)) represent- wrap’ convex polytopes around the three-dimensional skeleton ing our preferred articulation of the elements based on and deriving a mass estimate based on the relationship between comparative dinosaur anatomy and information from the extant convex hull volume (Cvol) and body mass in modern species. phylogenetic bracket (crocodilians/birds). A sensitivity analysis Using a three-dimensional computer model of an excep- quantified the effect of rearticulation on Cvol. Intervertebral tionally complete Stegosaurus specimen, we compare mass spacing, rib flaring and scapula position were altered to define a estimation techniques based on volumetric and traditional minimum (Cvol(min)) and maximum (Cvol(max))volumeposefor bivariate regressions to test if estimates generated from limb the skeleton (electronic supplementary material, S3). Models were subdivided into functional units: head, neck, trunk bone dimensions alone are biologically plausible for taxa (sacrum and thorax), tail, upper arm, forearm, hand, thigh, with morphologies lacking close modern analogues or for shank and foot. The cervical series was subdivided to ensure a specimens that have not attained full adult size. tight fit of the hulls around the neck. Convex hulls were fitted to functional units using the ‘convhulln’ function in MATLAB (www.mathworks.com) implementing the ‘qhull’ algorithm [11]. Total Cvol was calculated as the sum of segment values, and 2. Material and methods body mass estimated using the relationship between Cvol and The specimen is a Stegosaurus stenops (NHMUK (Natural History body mass published elsewhere [7,12] (electronic supplementary Museum, London) R36730) from the Upper Jurassic Morrison material, S4). By directly converting Cvol into a mass estimate, a Downloaded from http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/ on July 19, 2016 body density value is not explicitly assigned. However, there is an 8000 3 assumption that the density of the fossil species falls within the range of those species from which the predictive equation is rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org derived, in this case modern quadrupedal mammals. 6000 We expanded our ‘maximum’ convex hull model (Cvol(max))to match the body mass value predicted when applying a recently published scaling equation (Cvol(C&E)) [4]. Dermal armour mass was determined separately and added to each volumetric mass 4000 estimate (electronic supplementary material, table S1). Mass esti- mates based on femoral and/or humeral circumference were calculated using the MASSTIMATE package in R [13] and raw data estimated mass (kg) available from previous studies [14,15] (electronic supplementary 2000 material, S4). The potential effect of ontogenetic scaling was inves- Biol. Lett. tigated using Developmental Mass Extrapolation (DME), whereby the mass of a ‘known’ adult individual (in this case Stegosaurus YPM (Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale University) 0 11 1853 and YPM 1856) is estimated using the bivariate equation in : 20140984 b question, and subsequently scaled isometrically on the basis of m vol(min) femoral length to the subadult individual [16] (electronic vol(pref) vol(max) M2004 vol(C&E) YPM1856 YPM1853 An1985 C C C C CE2012 supplementary material, S5). CE2012 DME DME Figure 2. Volumetric mass estimates for NHMUK R36730 calculated here compared with those derived from proximal limb circumference. For abbrevi- 3. Results ations, see table 2. (Online version in colour.) The convex hull reconstruction of our preferred model (Cvol(pref)) provides a mass estimate of 1560 kg (95% predic- tion interval (PI) 1082–2256 kg), including 34 kg of dermal Table 1. Volume data (m3) for convex hull reconstructions of Stegosaurus armour (electronic supplementary material, table S1). stenops (NHMUK R36730). Values for Cvol(min) of 1311 kg (95% PI ¼ 916–1884 kg) and C ¼ vol(max) of 1894 kg (95% PI 1303–2760 kg) derived

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